Sarah Manning discovers that she is one of multiple identical sisters, clones, each raised in a completely different environment resulting in completely different personalities. The first issue of the comic series retells the series pilot in snapshot form, focusing almost exclusively on telling the story from Sarah’s perspective.

All of the characters seem to be brutish thugs at best, whether they are magical anti-heroes or evil genius, psychopathic, identical twin, 13 year-olds. Everyone seems to think with their trigger fingers.

“Worlds will live. Worlds will die. And the DC Universe will never be the same.” Oops! Sorry, that’s the other guys, as Stan Lee calls them “the Distinguished Competition.” But what Marvel Comics will be embarking on in May accounts to essentially their version of DC’s 1985 mega-event, Crisis on Infinite Earths.

Those who lamented IDW’s loss of the rights to publish Doctor Who comic books may be appeased by what Titan Books has been doing with the property. With three main titles and a fourth on the way, fans of Doctor Who have a lot to be excited about.

In the aftermath of World War II, writer and activist, Stetson Kennedy, sets out on a one-man mission to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan in Atlanta, Georgia. After failing to get Klan members arrested, Kennedy risks his life to pass on valuable Klan information to the producers of the Superman Radio Show.

Marvel’s magnificent mammal has been making mischief for 38 years. Rocket Raccoon was originally created by comic legends Bill Mantlo and Keith Giffen as a gag character in the black and white Marvel Preview magazine #7. Over the next 31 years, he would only have a handful of appearances and a four-issue mini-series.

These days most Americans seem to have forgotten what America is supposed to represent. Funny then that a book written by an Irishman serves as such a heartfelt representation of American courage, American values, American dreams.